THE NEW YORKER .:...... ... . . ... . ... .. '.';". .-.: : :'" :. .... .': ". '. "." . ,. ""-"---.-'.. ......,. i;". . Frl;:idi;':i: ' ':, . !; . . '. _,JJ. 1 .J .....>>,-:;- "::":.. :....;:. ., . :Ü it :: ."í 1(: à ...,:: i : .# Mt h:::i: ; r::: ;[ :: ;;f -} õ< ",;<:!,I....Æ .....:..... ... : : :.. ,J ,-'.::..::r :':=:' . ',,::: ::.-;. ::.. i: f ífne CARLYLE MADISON AVENUE at 76th ST NEW YORK RH inclander 4-1600 A Residential ']-{otel with a distinguished Restaurant and Bar. ONE TO TEN ROOMS urnished or 11n f-urnished Midtown Office DOUGLAS L. ELLIMAN CO" INC. AGENT 1 5 East 49th Street PLaza 3 9200 Is your furniture disfigured by a "growth of the soil". . . spots. . . grimy stains? Rush it to Renofab! Our special- ized upholstery dry clean- ing process makes your fur- niture radiate cleanliness! Draperies, too. We remove and rehang them. Call REgent 4-3280. 305 Easl 63rd 51. . ... ,e, a A Continental Rendezvous for LUnC+i . COCKT-AIL -HOUP, - Dlnn-ep, . UPP-Ep' twia nirhtly a-jU1- t.ñt.a1:re:SWl. at 10tl12 LUCIENNE BOYEA ...... .... - '71-E-A ST t;O T-H ST., n.Y ..= 7ta1JtV11z/FvtrljSa11.Lr )}þntOQ1t = f Reservations ELdorado 5-B028-g :- = "'[he road taken by the steel mag- nates is clear enough: it leads through fear and force to Fascism." (Photo- graphs, 383 pages, $3.) NEW ARMOR FOR OLD, by William O'Sullivan Molony. A most curious autobiography by an Irish-Ameri- can adventurer-diplomat. After four years of internment in a German prison camp, he went to Oxford; thence was drawn to Morocco; then to Poland, and the Ukraine during the counter-revolutionary period; to Geneva and London on League of Nations business; and finally to a mental hospital in Switzerland, where he underwent experiences not dissimilar to those of Mr. Seabrook. The narrative darts back and forth feverishly, and the prose itself is su- percharged, neurotic, and, toward the close, filled with a vague religi- ous mysticism. (442 pages, $3.) GOD SHAKES CREATION, by David Cohn. Mr. Cohn is a Mississippian who has spent much of his life away from his native heath, but who loves it and has now written a book about the Delta culture and the race ques- tion underlying it. He is most enter- taining when describing Negro mor- als, manners, preachers, sex habits, and conventions, least convincing when talking about share-croppers and eXploitation. His general point of view is benevolent and conscious- ly provincial; there is no attempt to tie the Delta into the general econo- my of America. On the whole, a better book in its field than is "Stars Fell on Alabama." The drawings by Lucian Dent are pseudo-Covarru- bias. (299 pages, $3.50.) SUME AMERICAN PEOPLE, by Erskine Caldwell. From May, 1934, to May, 1935, Mr. Caldwell travel- led through America, talking to peo- 103 READS OR COCKTAILS? Major Cruff says that anyone who uses his head at nighl never has a head in the morning. "Mellow old Hildick Applejack," adds the Ma)or,"tastes good, is in good taste, and leaves no afler-taste. I' Any cocktail, highball 01' mixed drink you can make with whiskey, rum 01' brandy, you can make smoother, tastier, cheaper with \!:A !{i.. IlAX1'1 Write for Major Cruff's favorite recipes Distributed by BLUEBELL IMPORTING CORPORATION 271 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. Also Distributors of King William IV v. O. P. Scotch Whisky, Vickers Gin, and Gilson Cognac